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New Year (novel) | 75,688,437 | Plot | The novel is set on New Year's Day and takes place during a bicycle ride up a mountain slope on the island of Lanzarote, as the cyclist Henning reviews his own life, which feels increasingly alien to him. Henning is on a winter vacation with his family and has recurring panic attack. His wife Theresa accuses him of being insufficient due to his neurotic personality and flirted with a Frenchman at the New Year's dinner the night before. Their two young children prefer their mother, despite that Henning spends more time with them. The exhausting bicycle ride makes him hallucinate and reminisce about his childhood in search for a possible origin of his struggles. |
New Year (novel) | 75,688,437 | Reception | Karin Janker of the Süddeutsche Zeitung wrote that the book portrays "the overwhelmed father", who is comparable but distinct from "the overwhelmed lover", "the overwhelmed artist" and "the overwhelmed city dweller" found in 19th-century novels. Janker said the novel is about an identity crisis in the wake of lost certainties, and that it "shows the emancipated society what it would rather not see: that even those who are at the forefront of emancipation can overwhelm themselves when they try to live several lives at the same time". Kirkus Reviews called the book a "spine-tingler" that portrays "a spectacularly hallucinatory middle-aged crisis". |
New Year (novel) | 75,688,437 | Adaptation | The novel was adapted into the play Neujahr, written by Elisa Hempel and Dariusch Yazdkhasti. It was directed by Yazdkhasti in a production for the Theater Bielefeld that starred Lukas Graser and Leona Grundig. It premiered on 21 November 2019. |
Berardino Capocchiano | 75,688,447 | Berardino Capocchiano (born 16 August 1965) is an Italian former footballer who played as a forward. |
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Berardino Capocchiano | 75,688,447 | Capocchiano grew up in Italy, but moved to West Germany for personal reasons in 1987. He played for TSV Havelse and Arminia Bielefeld in Germany before transferring to Serie A club Lazio in 1991, where he appeared in 2 league matches. He subsequently played for Bari, Avellino, Chieti, Latina and Rondinella. |
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Berardino Capocchiano | 75,688,447 | Playing career | Born and raised in Zapponeta, Capacchiano began his career in Italy, playing for amateur side Carugatese. He moved to West Germany in 1987 for family reasons, and signed for third-tier TSV Havelse shortly after. He joined Arminia Bielefeld in 1989 before returning to Havelse a year later, now in the 2. Bundesliga. After 14 goals in 35 league games for Havelse during the 1990–91 season, Capocchiano transferred to TSV 1860 Munich for a reported fee of 140,000 Deutsche Marks in July 1991. However, Capocchiano never played for 1860 Munich - he terminated his contract shortly after signing for the club in order to sign for Serie A club Lazio, whilst having reportedly told 1860 Munich that he had to go to Italy to look after his mother and sister. The transfer was subject to a complaint by 1860 Munich president Helmut Schmitz to the DFB and FIFA, with Lazio paying 70,000 marks as a result in addition to the 140,000 they initially paid according to 1860 Munich. The protracted nature of the transfer also left Capocchiano unavailable for Lazio until November. He made his debut for the club on 4 December 1991 as a substitute against Torino in the Coppa Italia, and in total made just 2 league appearances for the club. |
Berardino Capocchiano | 75,688,447 | Playing career | In the summer of 1992, Capocchiano signed for Serie B club Bari on a five year contract. Across the 1992–93 season, Capocchiano scored 4 goals in 21 games, whilst he failed to score in 6 appearances during the 1993–94 season, leading to criticism of his performances for the club and the nickname "Pibe de piombo" ("lead pipe") being coined for him by comedy duo Toti e Tata. He subsequently had spells on loan at Avellino, where he made no appearances, and Chieti, where he scored 13 goals in 59 league games. After leaving Bari in 1996, played for amateur sides Latina, scoring twice in 7 matches and Rondinella, scoring twice in 9 games. |
Berardino Capocchiano | 75,688,447 | After football | Since his football career, Capocchiano has become an entrepreneur - he is the owner of the Coesi Group. He attempted to purchase Piacenza Calcio 1919 in 2011, but later decided against the purchase given the clubs financial condition. |
Berardino Capocchiano | 75,688,447 | After football | Capocchiano also unsuccessfully ran for office as a councillor for the newly formed Province of Monza and Brianza in 2009. |
Rio railway station | 75,688,449 | Rio railway station (Greek: Σιδηροδρομικός Σταθμός Ρίο, romanized: Sidirodromikos Stathmos Ρίο) is a railway station in Rio, a town in the suburbs of Patras in the northwestern Peloponnese, Greece. The station is located just outside the centre of the city, on Piraeus–Patras line and Patras–Kyparissia line and is severed by both Proastiakos Patras Services. Pending the completion of the Athens Airport–Patras railway, it is also the starting point of Hellenic Train bus lines to Aigio, Diakopto and Kiato, where connecting train services to Athens Airport and Piraeus (via Athens central railway station) are available. Diakopto is also the terminus of the unique rack railway to Kalavryta. |
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Rio railway station | 75,688,449 | The station (and the section of line) is currently closed and under reconstruction as part of the construction of the new Athens-Patras railway line, which (when completed) will allow fastener connectivity with Athens. As a result, a new temporary station *with the same name) has been operating since 26 March 2019, at the junction of Zaimi & Iroon Polytechneiou streets (600 m west of the station building), which serves the trains of the Patras suburban train. however the stations café, Rio Rages Cafe, is currently (as of 2022) open). |
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Rio railway station | 75,688,449 | History | The station opened in 1887 as the main passenger terminal of the city. With the construction in 1890 of the Kryoneri-Agrinio line, the station became the end of that line. |
Rio railway station | 75,688,449 | History | In 1970 OSE became the legal successor to the SEK, taking over responsibilities for most of Greece's rail infrastructure. On 1 January 1971, the station and most of Greek rail infrastructure were transferred to the Hellenic Railways Organisation S.A., a state-owned corporation. Freight traffic declined sharply when the state-imposed monopoly of OSE for the transport of agricultural products and fertilisers ended in the early 1990s. Many small stations of the network with little passenger traffic were closed down. In 2005 operations from the station were suspended due to the reconstruction works of the OSE railway network in the region. In 2009, with the Greek debt crisis unfolding OSE's Management was forced to reduce services across the network. Timetables were cut back and routes closed as the government-run entity attempted to reduce overheads. The station reopened on 9 July 2010 as part of the Proastiakos Patras services, served by trains between Agios Andreas and Agios Vassilios stations. Since the suspension of regional services on the metre-gauge railways of the Peloponnese in 2011, the station is used only by local Proastiakos trains which currently connect the city with the suburbs of Rio and Kaminia. In 2017 OSE's passenger transport sector was privatised as TrainOSE, currently, a wholly owned subsidiary of Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane infrastructure, including stations, remained under the control of OSE. |
Rio railway station | 75,688,449 | History | The station (and the section of line) closed 26 March 2019 for reconstruction as part of the construction of the new Athens-Patras railway line, with a new temporary station (with the same name), at the junction of Zaimi & Iroon Polytechneiou streets (600 m west of the station building). From 29 February 2020 service across the network were suspended due to the coronavirus pandemic, becoming the starting point of the new Line P1 of the Suburban Railway to the town of Kato Achaia. With the resumption of services on 4 July 2020, it was replaced as the starting point of Line P1 by Agios Andreas. |
Rio railway station | 75,688,449 | History | In 2022 the contract to upgrade and rebuld the section of the line was signed. The contract, undertaken by ERGOSE through the TERNA-MYTILINEOS scheme from 22 November 2022 and has a completion period of 36 months. At a cost €174.97 million, its funding has been secured by the NSRF 2014-2020 while it is expected to continue as a bridge project from the NSRF 2021-2027. |
Rio railway station | 75,688,449 | Facilities | The station building lies in southeast of the settlement on Somerset. It is a small original station building, now used as a cafe. There is only a single platform and two meter gauge rail tracks (now disused). |
Rio railway station | 75,688,449 | Services | The station (the temporary one) is served by the Agios Andreas–Rio line of the Proastiakos, with another line running from the Agios Andreas terminus to Kaminia pending the extension to Kato Achaia. Rail services are provided by OSE trains (Stadler GTW 2/6 diesel two-car units). The trains run every hour daily, from 6:23 in the morning until 23:23 in the evening. The Agios Andreas–Rio route has two bus connections at Kastellokampos—to Agios Vasileios and the General University Hospital of Patras via the University of Patras. |
Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,451 | Lisa Allen (born April 23, 1971) is a British actress. She was born in Bolton. She studied Drama and Media Performance at University College Salford, under the tutelage of actress Sarah Lancashire. She has worked in TV, film, theatre and on Radio 4. Her screen credits include FUNNY WOMAN (Sky), ALMA’S NOT NORMAL (Expectation for BBC), PASSENGER (ITVX and Britbox), SILENT WITNESS (BBC Studios), PLATFORM 7 (Dancing Ledge for ITVX), HULLRAISERS (Channel 4), THE FULL MONTY (Disney Plus), SISTER BONIFACE MYSTERIES and WATERLOO ROAD (BBC), DCI BANKS and EMMERDALE (ITV), LET HER GO (Make Me Films), COAL IN THEIR VEINS (Ora Films), THE WALK (Two Larks Films), DIANA AND I (BIG TALK FOR BBC 2) and FUNNY COW (POW Films National Cinema Release). She collaborates regularly with the actor Tony Pitts. |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,451 | Awards and Nominations |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,451 | Diversity in Cannes Short Film Showcase Won, Jury Choice Best Actor for Coal in Their Veins Ora Films |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,451 | London International Short Film Festival Nominated, Festival AwardBest Actor for Coal in Their Veins Ora Films |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,451 | The British Short Film Awards Nominated, Best Actress for Coal in Their Veins Ora Films |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,451 | Links https://m.imdb.com/name/nm0020776/ |
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Karin Salanova | 75,688,468 | Karin Salanova (29 January 1975) is a Venezuelan politician, deputy of the National Assembly for circuit 3 of Aragua state and the Justice First opposition party. |
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Karin Salanova | 75,688,468 | Career | Karin graduated as a lawyer from Universidad Santa María in Caracas. Before becoming a deputy, Karin served as state secretary of the Justice First party and as president of the municipal council of José Félix Ribas for the 2015-2016 term. She was elected as deputy of the National Assembly for circuit 3 of Aragua state in the 2015 parliamentary elections representing the Democratic Unity Roundtable (MUD) opposition coalition, for Justice First party. She was known as "the 112nd" for being among the last deputies to be proclaimed. Since 2016 she integrated the Permanent Family Commission, and for the 2018-2019 period Karin served as its vice-president. |
Blotto (restaurant) | 75,688,474 | Blotto was a restaurant on Seattle's Capitol Hill, in the U.S. state of Washington. Cal Hoffmann and Jordan Koplowitz established the pizzeria as a pop-up in 2020, before relocating to a brick and mortar space in 2021. Despite garnering a positive reception, Blotto closed in December 2023. |
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Blotto (restaurant) | 75,688,474 | Description | Blotto was a pizzeria and corner market that operated in an approximately 120-year-old house at the intersection of 12th Avenue and East Denny Way on Seattle's Capitol Hill. The restaurant served New York-style pies, including cheese, pepperoni, and seasonal varieties. The menu also included a Caesar salad and a Mah Zeh burnt potato side. Blotto stocked artisinal food products and wine. |
Blotto (restaurant) | 75,688,474 | History | Blotto started as a pop-up in Broadway Alley in 2020, before moving into a brick and mortar space in June 2021. In 2022, staff were challenged by working during a heat wave. |
Blotto (restaurant) | 75,688,474 | History | The business was owned by Cal Hoffmann and Jordan Koplowitz. In December 2023, owners announced plans to close on December 30, as the landlord intends to sell the building. During the last week of operation, the restaurant only sold pizza by the slice. |
Blotto (restaurant) | 75,688,474 | Reception | Allecia Vermillion included Blotto in Seattle Metropolitan's 2021 list of the city's best new restaurants and bars. Alyssa Therrien included the business in Daily Hive's list of seven "new Seattle restaurants you need to try right now" in 2021. In 2022, Aimee Rizzo of The Infatuation wrote, "Blotto's round pizza crust is a gorgeous cross between sourdough and New York-style, with a brittle crispness throughout the bottom and puffed ends that resemble pool noodles (but taste a whole lot better)." In the website's 2023 overview of the city's best pizza, she and Kayla Sager-Riley wrote, "we can definitively say that Blotto is the best slice joint in Seattle". The duo also included Blotto in a 2023 list of the best restaurants on Capitol Hill. Eater Seattle included the business in a 2022 overview of the city's "wonderful" wine bars, and Brett Bankson called the space "vivacious". Jade Yamazaki Stewart and Meg van Huygen included Blotto in the website's 2023 list of thirteen Seattle eateries serving "perfect" pizza. In 2023, Blotto was deemed one of Seattle's 25 best restaurants by The New York Times. |
Blotto (restaurant) | 75,688,474 | External links | |
University of Illinois College of Law alumni | 75,688,485 | Following is a list of notable alumni of the University of Illinois College of Law. |
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Sheridan Winn | 75,688,489 | Sheridan Winn is a British journalist and novelist. |
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Sheridan Winn | 75,688,489 | Family | She was born Sheridan Ebbage in Drayton, Norwich, the eldest of four sisters. She married and later divorced illustrator Chris Winn. They had xxx children. |
Sheridan Winn | 75,688,489 | Family | Winn studied graphic design at Bristol Polytechnic and the University of Bristol. She earned a teaching certificate and worked as an art and English teacher in Norwich schools from 1979 to 1985. |
Sheridan Winn | 75,688,489 | Family | Starting in 1980, she worked as the business manager for her husband Chris Winn and their company Chris Winn Associates, which produced the cartoon "Mad Gadget" for the Young Telegraph. They produced a "Mad Gadget" computer game and book. |
Sheridan Winn | 75,688,489 | Family | In 2008 she published the first book in her series The Sprite Sisters. The books have been translated into German; Parts 9 and 10 have so far only been published in German. |
Sheridan Winn | 75,688,489 | Family | The series is popular in Germany, and has been adapted into a German-language film "Vier zauberhafte Schwestern" ("Four Enchanted Sisters", 2020), directed by Sven Unterwaldt Jr. |
Northfields Depot | 75,688,497 | Northfields Depot is a London Underground depot in Northfields in the London Borough of Ealing. It is situated between Northfields and Boston Manor stations on the Piccadilly line. |
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Northfields Depot | 75,688,497 | History | Northfields Depot was built for the western extension of the Piccadilly line and opened on 4 July 1932. Construction of the depot required the existing Northfields station to be rebuilt nearer to South Ealing station. |
Northfields Depot | 75,688,497 | History | Until 1964, the depot was also used by District line trains which ran to Hounslow West. |
Cheadle Rural District | 75,688,520 | 52°59′27″N 1°59′13″W / 52.99075°N 1.98705°W / 52.99075; -1.98705 |
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Cheadle Rural District | 75,688,520 | Cheadle Rural District was a rural district in the administrative county of Staffordshire, England from 1894 to 1974, covering an area in the north of the county centred on the small town of Cheadle. |
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Cheadle Rural District | 75,688,520 | Origins | The district had its origins in the Cheadle Poor Law Union, which had been created in 1837, covering Cheadle itself and several surrounding parishes. In 1872 sanitary districts were established, giving public health and local government responsibilities for rural areas to the existing boards of guardians of poor law unions. The Cheadle Rural Sanitary District was administered from Cheadle Union Workhouse, which had been built in 1775 on Bank Street. |
Cheadle Rural District | 75,688,520 | Origins | Under the Local Government Act 1894, rural sanitary districts became rural districts from 28 December 1894. |
Cheadle Rural District | 75,688,520 | Premises | The council built itself a new headquarters at 40 Leek Road (then also known as Greenhill), which was formally opened on 5 March 1937. |
Cheadle Rural District | 75,688,520 | Abolition | Cheadle Rural District was abolished under the Local Government Act 1972, merging with neighbouring districts to become the new district of Staffordshire Moorlands. The former Cheadle Rural District Council offices at 40 Leek Road subsequently served as an area office for the new district council until building sold and converted into flats around 2015, with the old council chamber being retained in municipal use for meetings of Cheadle Town Council. |
Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,542 | Lisa Allen (born April 23, 1971) is a British actress. She was born in Bolton. She studied Drama and Media Performance at University College Salford, under the tutelage of actress Sarah Lancashire. She has worked in TV, film, theatre and on Radio 4. Her screen credits include FUNNY WOMAN (Sky), ALMA’S NOT NORMAL (Expectation for BBC), PASSENGER (ITVX and Britbox), SILENT WITNESS (BBC Studios), PLATFORM 7 (Dancing Ledge for ITVX), HULLRAISERS (Channel 4), THE FULL MONTY (Disney Plus), SISTER BONIFACE MYSTERIES and WATERLOO ROAD (BBC), DCI BANKS and EMMERDALE (ITV), LET HER GO (Make Me Films), COAL IN THEIR VEINS (Ora Films), THE WALK (Two Larks Films), DIANA AND I (BIG TALK FOR BBC 2) and FUNNY COW (POW Films National Cinema Release). She collaborates regularly with the actor Tony Pitts. |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,542 | Awards and Nominations |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,542 | Diversity in Cannes Short Film Showcase Won, Jury Choice Best Actor for Coal in Their Veins Ora Films |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,542 | London International Short Film Festival Nominated, Festival AwardBest Actor for Coal in Their Veins Ora Films |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,542 | The British Short Film Awards Nominated, Best Actress for Coal in Their Veins Ora Films |
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Lisa Allen (actor) | 75,688,542 | Links https://m.imdb.com/name/nm0020776/ |
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University of Nebraska College of Law alumni | 75,688,558 | Following is a list of notable alumni of the Universtiy of Nebrask College of Law. |
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Beneklitaş, Kayapınar | 75,688,568 | Beneklitaş is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Kayapınar, Diyarbakır Province in Turkey. It is populated by Kurds and had a population of 413 in 2022. |
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2024 in Chinese music | 75,688,588 | The following is an overview of 2024 in Chinese music. Music in the Chinese language (Mandarin and Cantonese) and artists from Chinese-speaking countries (Mainland China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Malaysia, and Singapore) will be included. The following includes TV shows that involve Chinese music, award ceremonies, releases, and deaths that have occurred. |
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What Makes You Think You're the One | 75,688,600 | "What Makes You Think You're the One" is a song by British-American rock band Fleetwood Mac, released in 1979. Composed and sung by guitarist Lindsey Buckingham, it was one of his nine songs that appeared on the Tusk album. The song was also included on the US 2002 and UK 2009 editions of The Very Best of Fleetwood Mac. |
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What Makes You Think You're the One | 75,688,600 | Background | In February, Buckingham entered Studio D of The Village Recorder with a JVC ghetto blaster. After playing producers Ken Caillat and Richard Dashut a demo of "What Makes You Think You're the One" through some JBL speakers in the control room, Buckingham suggested that they create a new version using the JVC deck's input as the recording device. Caillat pushed back against this, insisting that the boombox would make the song excessively compressed, but Buckingham insisted that they use the device as he was sought to emulate the distorted sounds of old rock and roll recordings. |
What Makes You Think You're the One | 75,688,600 | Background | Fleetwood set up his drums in the corner of Studio D and recorded the song with Buckingham using the boombox as the recording device for the drums. Fleetwood said that they "opened the mics up so that it was recording straight onto tape, and that overload and compression is straight off the ghetto blaster. It gave it that "suck and push" sound". |
What Makes You Think You're the One | 75,688,600 | Background | Buckingham and Fleetwood stated that the song was created as a two-piece between the two of them, although Caillat recalled that John McVie was also present in the studio during the song's recording sessions. |
What Makes You Think You're the One | 75,688,600 | Background | "What Makes You Think You're the One" was played on the Tusk Tour. A 5 November 1979 live performance from St. Louis was included on the super deluxe edition of Tusk. During live performances of "What Make Makes You Think You're the One", Christine McVie played piano despite not doing so on the studio version. "'What Makes You Think You're The One' from Tusk, is especially tough to play. You have to keep crashing away at chords through the whole thing. By the time it's finished my wrists are like spaghetti." |
Cankatran, Kayapınar | 75,688,605 | Cankatran is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Kayapınar, Diyarbakır Province in Turkey. It is populated by Kurds and had a population of 1,171 in 2022. |
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Khadija Mbowe | 75,688,606 | Khadija Mbowe is a Gambian-Canadian YouTuber. By 2021 they had nearly 300,000 subscribers. Mbowe has covered topics such as Black masculinity, the male gaze, queerbaiting, and the racial history of emotional intelligence. |
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Gözegöl, Kayapınar | 75,688,637 | Gözegöl is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Kayapınar, Diyarbakır Province in Turkey. It is populated by Kurds and had a population of 293 in 2022. |
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Nicolas Vinokurov | 75,688,648 | Nicolas Vinokurov (Kazakh: Николас Винокуров,; born 7 July 2002) is a Kazakh cyclist, who currently rides for UCI WorldTeam Astana Qazaqstan Team. His father Alexandre and twin brother also named Alexandre also have competed as professional cyclists. |
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Cücük, Kayapınar | 75,688,652 | Cücük (Kurdish: Cucuk) is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Kayapınar, Diyarbakır Province in Turkey. It is populated by Kurds and had a population of 399 in 2022. |
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2024 in Japanese music | 75,688,693 | The year 2024 in Japanese music. |
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2024 in Japanese music | 75,688,693 | See also | |
Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law alumni | 75,688,698 | Following is a list of notable alumni of the Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law. |
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Gundeninda Gudigantalu | 75,688,734 | Gundeninda Gudigantalu is an Indian Telugu language romantic drama television series airing on Star Maa. It is an official remake of the Tamil TV series Siragadikka Aasai . It stars Vishnukanth and Amulya Gowda in lead role. It airs from Monday to Friday at 21:00(IST) and also available on digital platform Disney+ Hotstar |
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Gundeninda Gudigantalu | 75,688,734 | Plot | The show centres on the unexpected marriage of Meena, the eldest daughter of a lower-class family, and Balu, an eccentric taxi driver struggling with alcoholism. They slowly understand each other. Their journey to self-improvement and togetherness, despite external pressures, is a testament to the enduring power of love. |
Gundeninda Gudigantalu | 75,688,734 | Cast | Meena's husband, an alcoholic man with a cryptic past, who listens to no one, however, his love and affection towards his father and grandmother remain unchanged. (2023–present) |
Gundeninda Gudigantalu | 75,688,734 | Cast | Muthu's wife, works in flower shop, she's a kind hearted yet bold girl. (2023–present) |
Vilázio | 75,688,755 | Vilázio Lelis (23 September 1937 – 9 February 2006), simply known as Vilázio, was a Brazilian professional footballer who played as a defender. |
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Vilázio | 75,688,755 | Career | A vigorous defender, he began his career at Ginásio Pinhalense, and in 1960 he transferred to São Paulo FC, where he made 51 appearances. He also played for Club León de Torreón, AA Ponte Preta, América de Rio Preto, Santa Cruz, Atlântico de Erechim and Jandaia EC. He ended his career after the birth of his daughter, and owned a betting house in Vila Mariana, São Paulo. |
Güzelköy, Yenişehir | 75,688,756 | Güzelköy is a neighbourhood in the municipality and district of Yenişehir, Diyarbakır Province in Turkey. It is populated by Kurds and had a population of 942 in 2022. |
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Güzelköy, Yenişehir | 75,688,756 | References | |
Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | The Mississippi College Collegians football program's first three seasons of competition were from 1907 to 1909, representing Mississippi College, located in Clinton, Mississippi, as an independent. |
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Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | 1907 | The 1907 Mississippi College Collegians football team represented Mississippi College as an independent during the 1907 college football season. |
Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | 1907 | |
Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | 1907 | |
Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | 1908 | The 1908 Mississippi College Collegians football team was an American football team that represented Mississippi College as an independent in the 1908 college football season. Playing without a head coach, the team compiled an overall record of 0–1. |
Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | 1908 | |
Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | 1909 | The 1909 Mississippi College Collegians football team was an American football team that represented Mississippi College as an independent in the 1909 college football season. Playing without a head coach, the team compiled an overall record of 3–0. |
Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | 1909 | |
Mississippi College Collegians football, 1907–1909 | 75,688,759 | References | |
Sydney Mullaney | 75,688,763 | Sydney Mullaney (born May 7, 2001) is an American curler from Concord, Massachusetts. She currently plays second on Team Delaney Strouse. She is a two-time champion of the United States Junior Curling Championships, going on to win the bronze medal at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships and the 2023 Winter World University Games. She also won the 2019 United States Mixed Curling Championship. |
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Sydney Mullaney | 75,688,763 | Career | At the U18 level, Mullaney competed as lead for the Elizabeth Cousins rink. In 2017, the team went undefeated at the national championship until the final where they lost 6–4 to Cait Flannery, settling for silver. The following year, she joined the Susan Dudt rink where the team again went undefeated until the final before an 8–4 loss to Leah Yavarow. In 2019, her last year of eligibility, her team won the gold medal after a 9–3 win over Samantha Jones in the championship game. |
Sydney Mullaney | 75,688,763 | Career | At the end of the 2018–19 season, Mullaney teamed up with Hunter Clawson, Katherine Gourianova and Eli Clawson to compete in the 2019 United States Mixed Curling Championship. At the championship, the team finished tied for fourth through the round robin with a 6–3 record. They then won a tiebreaker against Ben Richardson before going on to beat the number one ranked Evan Workin rink in the semifinals. In the final, they came from behind to defeat Caitlin Pulli 9–5 to win the national title. This earned them the right to represent the U.S. at the 2019 World Mixed Curling Championship in Aberdeen, Scotland. There, the team qualified for the playoffs with a 5–2 record. In the round of 16, they lost to Switzerland's Manuel Siegrist 7–2, eliminating them from contention. |
Sydney Mullaney | 75,688,763 | Career | For the 2019–20 season, Mullaney and Dudt added Delaney Strouse and Rebecca Rodgers as their new front end. Playing third on the team skipped by Dudt, they reached the semifinals of the St. Paul Cash Spiel and represented the U.S. at the 2019 Changan Ford International Curling Elite where they finished 0–7. In the new year, Strouse took over skipping duties on the team with Dudt moving down to second. The change paid off as the team won the 2020 United States Junior Curling Championships, winning 9–8 in the final against Alaska's Cora Farrell. This qualified them to represent the States at the 2021 World Junior Curling Championships, however, the event was cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic. They ended their season by playing in the 2020 United States Women's Curling Championship where they finished 2–5 through the round robin. |
Sydney Mullaney | 75,688,763 | Career | The following season, Leah Yavarow joined the team at third, shifting Mullaney down to second and Dudt to alternate. Despite the limited number of events due to the pandemic, Team Strouse won the lone tour event they played in, the contender round of the US Open of Curling. They also played in the 2021 United States Women's Curling Championship which was held in a bio-secure bubble at the Wausau Curling Club in Wausau, Wisconsin in May 2021. They finished with a 2–4 record, not advancing to the playoffs. Mullaney also played in the bubble for the 2021 United States Mixed Doubles Curling Championship with partner Chase Sinnett. After a 3–2 round robin record, the pair lost a tiebreaker to Monica Walker and Alex Leichter. |
Sydney Mullaney | 75,688,763 | Career | Team Strouse began the 2021–22 season by capturing a second U.S. junior title, going undefeated to win the event. After going 5–0 in the round robin, they beat Samantha Jones in the semifinal before defeating Katherine Gourianova in the gold medal game. They also earned qualification into the 2021 United States Olympic Curling Trials by winning the Mayfield qualifying event, beating Christine McMakin in the final qualifier. Before the Trials, Leah Yavarow was replaced on the team by Anne O'Hara who became the team's new third. At the Trials, they finished tied for fifth with a 3–7 record. In January, the team was set to compete in the 2022 World Junior-B Curling Championships, however, an outbreak of COVID cases in the men's event forced the women's event to be cancelled. Because of this, the World Curling Federation named the top three ranked nations who had not already qualified for the world championship as the qualifiers, with the United States being one of them. In May 2022, they represented the U.S. at the 2022 World Junior Curling Championships. Through the round robin, the team finished in second place with a 7–2 record, suffering losses to Latvia's Evelīna Barone and the top ranked Norway's Eirin Mesloe. In the semifinals, they met the eventual champions Japan's Sae Yamamoto where they fell 7–3. They bounced back in the bronze medal game, however, beating Norway in a 10–6 game. Also during the season, Mullaney was selected to be the alternate for the Cory Christensen rink for the 2022 World Women's Curling Championship. There, the team finished the round robin in fifth place with an 8–4 record. This qualified them for the playoffs where they lost in the qualification round 8–6 to Sweden's Anna Hasselborg. Mullaney played in three ends of the championship in the team's game against Canada's Kerri Einarson. Mullaney and Sinnett teamed up again for the 2022 United States Mixed Doubles Curling Championship where they lost in the final qualifying event. |
Sydney Mullaney | 75,688,763 | Career | The Strouse rink found major success during the 2022–23 season, beginning at the US Open of Curling where they had an undefeated run until the final where they were defeated by Ha Seung-youn. They also qualified for the playoffs in their next event, the 2022 Stu Sells Toronto Tankard, before falling in the quarterfinals to Lauren Mann. The team next played in the playdowns for the 2023 Winter World University Games where they won all four of their games to win the event. Back on tour, they had four more playoff appearances, reaching three quarterfinals and one semifinal at the Curling Stadium Contender Series. In the new year, the team represented the U.S. on home soil at the 2023 Winter World University Games in Saranac Lake, New York. The team was dominant through the round robin, with Strouse, O'Hara, Mullaney, Rodgers and Dudt securing an 8–1 record, finishing just behind Korea's Ha Seung-youn who was their sole loss. In the semifinals, they met China's Han Yu where they suffered a narrow 6–5 loss. They would claim the bronze medal after a 7–3 win against Great Britain's Fay Henderson. Continuing their momentum from the season, Team Strouse finished 6–1 through the round robin at the 2023 United States Women's Curling Championship. In the 1 vs. 2 game, they faced the top ranked Tabitha Peterson rink where they gave up four in the tenth end to lose 11–10. They rebounded by beating Sarah Anderson 9–4 in the semifinal. They could not take revenge on Peterson in the final, however, dropping the game 8–5 and settling for the silver medal. At the 2023 United States Mixed Doubles Curling Championship, Mullaney and Sinnett finished 2–5 in pool play. |
Sydney Mullaney | 75,688,763 | Personal life | Mullaney is a student at the Hubbard School of Journalism at the University of Minnesota. She previously attended Concord-Carlisle High School. |
Bùi Thị Xuân Hạnh | 75,688,771 | Bùi Thị Xuân Hạnh is a Vietnamese model and beauty pageant titleholder who was crowned Miss Cosmo Vietnam 2023 and she will represent Vietnam at Miss Cosmo International 2024 held in September 2024 in Vietnam. She also won the title of runner-up of The Face Vietnam 2023. |
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Bùi Thị Xuân Hạnh | 75,688,771 | Early Career | Bui Xuan Hanh was born in 2001 in Ninh Binh, she studied at Luong Van Tuy High School for the Gifted and graduated from National Economics University. |
Bùi Thị Xuân Hạnh | 75,688,771 | Career | Xuan Hanh officially registered at The Face Vietnam 2023 as a contestant of coach Vũ Thu Phương. In the final night of the competition, through excellent rounds, she won the final runner-up position with the champion being Huỳnh Tú Anh from coach Anh Thu's team. |
Bùi Thị Xuân Hạnh | 75,688,771 | Career | Xuan Hanh continues to participate in the beauty arena by registering at the Miss Cosmo Vietnam 2023 contest and is also the first beauty contest she participates in. She won this contest. |
Bùi Thị Xuân Hạnh | 75,688,771 | Career | With the title of Miss Cosmo Vietnam 2023, she officially became the representative of Vietnam at Miss Cosmo International 2024 held in September 2024 in Ho Chi Minh City. |
Mountain Artillery Group "Udine" | 75,688,779 | The Mountain Artillery Group "Udine" (Italian: Gruppo Artiglieria da Montagna "Udine") is an inactive mountain artillery group of the Italian Army, which was based in Vacile in Friuli-Venezia Giulia. The group was formed on 1 February 1915 by the Royal Italian Army's 2nd Mountain Artillery Regiment and served with the regiment during World War I on the Italian front. In World War II the group was assigned to the 3rd Alpine Artillery Regiment "Julia", with which it participated in the invasion of France and the Greco-Italian War. In summer 1942 the 3rd Alpine Artillery Regiment "Julia" was transferred to the Soviet Union, where it was destroyed in winter 1942-43 during the Soviet Operation Little Saturn. The remnants of the regiment were repatriated in spring 1943 and invading German forces disbanded the regiment and its groups after the announcement of the Armistice of Cassibile on 8 September 1943. |
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